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As the longtime leader of the genre-defying close harmony quartet
the Hi-Lo's,
Gene Puerling exponentially expanded the parameters of traditional pop vocals via sophisticated, jazz-inspired arrangements that profoundly shaped the rock & roll generation that followed in the group's wake. Born March 31, 1929, in Milwaukee,
Puerling first earned notice contributing bass-baritone vocals to the local group the Four Shades, which also featured baritone Bob Strasen. After relocating to Los Angeles in 1950,
Puerling and Strasen founded
the Hi-Lo's in collaboration with baritone Bob Morse and tenor
Clark Burroughs, who previously teamed in the Encores, a short-lived ensemble led by session vocal legend Randy Van Horne. After bandleader (and future film composing icon)
Jerry Fielding recommended
the Hi-Lo's to the fledgling L.A. label Trend, the group cut its debut EP in April 1953, scoring a minor local hit with "Georgia." "Love Me or Leave Me," recorded in support of singer
Herb Jeffries, soon followed on Olympic. While
Burroughs' astounding lead vocals enabled
Puerling the flexibility to create daring, stunningly complex arrangements some distance removed from the current chart fare, Trend resisted the more radical impulses of
the Hi-Lo's, and in mid-1954 the quartet exited the label in frustration. They soon signed with Starlite, teaming with orchestral arranger and conductor
Frank Comstock at the now-legendary Gold Star Studios, a facility famed for its singularly rich acoustics -- their debut album,
Listen!, followed by year's end, trailed in 1955 by The Hi-Lo's, I Presume.
Although commercial success continued to elude
the Hi-Lo's, they emerged as a critical favorite, and successive LPs -- including Under Glass and On Hand -- further expanded the quartet's palette, with
Puerling's increasingly challenging and beautiful arrangements over time incorporating elements of contemporary pop, barbershop, calypso, and musical theater. In late 1956,
the Hi-Lo's signed to Columbia, where their label debut,
Suddenly It's the Hi-Lo's, sold in excess of 100,000 copies thanks to promotion via television's Nat King Cole Show --
Rosemary Clooney then invited the group to join the cast of her syndicated variety show, and together they cut an album, Ring Around Rosie. Despite the quartet's growing media profile, the group's albums remained cult favorites at best, however, and Columbia A&R chief
Mitch Miller consistently pressured
Puerling to simplify his approach in favor of a more radio-friendly formula. He resisted, and after a series of commercial duds culminating in
This Time It's Love, Columbia cut its losses and let the group go. Then avowed fan
Frank Sinatra telegrammed
the Hi-Lo's in 1962, inviting them to join his fledgling Reprise label; their two Reprise albums,
The Hi-Lo's Happen to Folk Songs and
The Hi-Lo's Happen to Bossa Nova, both aimed squarely at commercial trends and fell wide of the mark, and their tenure with the company proved brief.
Although a new generation of West Coast harmony pop acts including
the Beach Boys and
the Mamas & the Papas regularly cited
the Hi-Lo's as a massive influence, the commercial onslaught of rock & roll finally spelled the group's demise in 1965, and two years later
Puerling assembled a new vehicle, the Chicago-based a cappella quartet
Singers Unlimited, recruiting
Don Shelton (who had replaced Strasen in 1960) as well as newcomers Len Dresslar and
Bonnie Herman. Although
Puerling originally envisioned
Singers Unlimited as a purely commercial proposition created to record advertising jingles (Dresslar was in fact the voice of advertising icon the Jolly Green Giant), pianist
Oscar Peterson recommended the group to the German jazz label MPS, and in 1971 they recorded the first of more than a dozen LPs.
Singers Unlimited's signature sound relied heavily on multi-tracking techniques pioneered by German studio engineer
Hans Georg Brunner-Schwer -- during post-production,
Puerling and
Shelton added new vocal elements, with all parts later doubled and even tripled to create a powerful, rich sound that multiplied their four vocals into a virtual army of voices. Even before
Singers Unlimited dissolved in 1982, MPS encouraged
Puerling to organize a
Hi-Lo's reunion, and in 1978 the comeback effort Back Again hit retail, its release touted with an appearance at the 1978 Monterey Jazz Festival. Now followed in 1980, and the group continued touring throughout the decade to come, finally calling it quits in 1994 but making sporadic reunion appearances for many years after.
Puerling died of complications from diabetes on March 25, 2008, just days shy of his 79th birthday. ~ Jason Ankeny